The Davos Gang鈥檚 risk list makes for depressing reading

THE World Economic Forum (WEF), arranger of the annual Davos shindig, has just published its 17th . It makes for thoroughly depressing reading 鈥 for its context as much as its content.
Male, pale, and stale remains the defining characteristic of the Davos crowd. Some two-thirds of the more than 900 survey respondents were male, with almost half based in Europe and more than 40% aged 50 or over. More than 40% were business executives, with 16% working in government, 17% in academia and 10% in nongovernmental organizations.
But the gender imbalance isn鈥檛 the most disconcerting aspect of the report. Five of the top 10 risks that survey participants said are the most severe facing the world in the coming decade are tied to the environment. The top three all stem from the climate emergency, with 鈥渃limate action failure鈥 deemed the biggest global threat in the next 10 years. So much for all those and designed to limit global warming.
That鈥檚 particularly disheartening for two reasons. First, it鈥檚 been five years since the failure to address climate change initially rose to the top of the Davos worry list, and yet the situation seems to be getting worse. The WEF鈥檚 report ranked extreme weather events as the world鈥檚 most challenging peril from 2017 to 2021, and yet the planet continues to overheat.
In the past half century, , according to data published earlier this week by the European Union鈥檚 Copernicus Climate Change Service. The numbers show 2021 was the fifth warmest period in 52 years, and hotter than both 2015 and 2018. A surge in atmospheric methane, a greenhouse gas more than 80 times more powerful than carbon dioxide in contributing to global warming, helped make July the hottest single month ever recorded by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. No wonder wildfires have become almost commonplace in many regions.
The second reason to be dismayed is that of all the risks that society faces, the tools are available to governments to ease, if not end, the climate crisis. Terrorist attacks, natural disasters and cybercrime 鈥 all of which have featured prominently in the WEF rankings in recent years 鈥 are slippery, amorphous dangers to tackle. Taking action to stop destroying the planet is practical and achievable.
And yet even rich nations continue to miss their targets. Germany鈥檚 emissions climbed by 4.5% in 2021 compared with the previous year, according to think tank . The country will probably fail to achieve its goals this year and next and has a 鈥渄rastic deficit鈥 in its efforts to tackle global warming, German Economy Minister .
Curbing greenhouse gas emissions isn鈥檛 easy or cheap, but at least it鈥檚 measurable and within the purview of concerted government action to achieve. Let鈥檚 hope that in the coming years, countries take enough steps that the climate emergency drops off the WEF鈥檚 hazards facing the world.
BLOOMBERG OPINION


